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Musharraf addresses Kabul jirga

Pakistan president attends tribal elders' meeting on its last day of talks.

12 Aug 2007 13:42 GMT

Musharraf asked both Afghanistan and Pakistan to work together to rescue their societies [AFP]

Backwardness

"Our societies face a great danger (from) a small minority that create violence and backwardness," Musharraf told about 700 tribal elders, politicians and other figures from both sides of the troubled border.

"Musharraf and Karzai have both become unpopular in their own countries and many people say this jirga is not going to achieve anything."

The jirga began deliberations on Thursday. Delegates had split into committees focused on topics such as the reasons for "terrorism", the fight against drugs - said to finance fighters - and good neighbourliness, Asif Nang, a spokesman, said.

The results of these findings are expected to help the formation of a strategy, to be announced on Sunday, before Musharraf and Karzai were to close the meeting, the spokesman said.

Recommendations are likely to include the establishment of a joint commission to analyse factors fuelling terrorism and another on fighting the drugs trade and organised crime, Afghan media reported on Sunday.

Wave of violence

On the ground, meanwhile, violence continued unabated.

Taliban attacks across Afghanistan have killed 29 people, including four international soldiers and nearly two dozen fighters, military officials said on Sunday.

Three soldiers with the US-led multinational force and their Afghan interpreter were killed near the border with Pakistan when they were hit by a bomb during combat, the force said in a statement.

Taliban fighters were responsible for the attack in Nangarhar province, a spokesman said, claiming the soldiers were US nationals.

British death

Earlier, the British defence ministry announced that a British soldier was killed and five wounded after their patrol came under fire from Taliban fighters in southern Afghanistan on Saturday.

The attack was in the volatile Sangin district of Helmand province. Fighters also ambushed an Afghan army patrol in Sangin overnight, the Afghan ministry of defence said.

The attack sparked a fierce gun battle in which seven fighters were killed and seven wounded, it said.

Fighter jets were called in to attack ground targets after the Taliban stormed an Afghan army post in southern Uruzgan province on Saturday.